
A Brief History of Population Growth in the Greater San Francisco Bay Region A Brief History of Population Growth in the Greater San Francisco Bay Region Page Mosier U.S. Geological Survey, Menlo Park, Calif. The population of the San Francisco Bay area is both growing and becoming increasingly diverse. The term “Greater San Francisco Bay Region” is applied to counties which are adjacent to the San Francisco Bay, including San Francisco, Napa, Sonoma, Solano, Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Mateo, and Santa Clara. (Although other counties are often included in the Bay area or region, they are not included in this report.) The first people in California were the Native Americans. Although it is hard to say exactly how many lived in California, their numbers are estimated to have been between 200,000 and 500,000 at the time of the first Spanish explorations. The native population in the Bay area was mainly of the Coastanoan, Coast Miwok, Yokut, and Wintun tribes. There were an estimated 7,000 Native Americans in the Bay area during the time that the Spanish missions were being established, including some that had been brought in by the Spanish from other areas. Although many ethnic groups have come to the Bay area, the first group to make a major impact on the population were the Spaniards, who erected their northernmost outposts in the San Francisco Bay region and attempted to convert the Native Americans in the area to their religion. Approximately 90 percent of these Native Americans died of hard- ship and disease resulting from their contact with these new immigrants. Spanish contributions were both political and economic. They erected presidios, or forts, and missions, which provided the economic basis for later California settlement. As a result of the War of Independence in 1821, Mexico attained independence from Spain, and California became part of the Republic of Mexico. San Francisco did not appear in the 1840 United States census, because it was then still part of Mexico. The majority of the immigrant population lived south of San Francisco. Land ownership consisted of large Mexican land grants covering most of the Bay area, which were given by the Mexican government to be settled by Rancheros or “Californios,” as they were called. The Mexican period was one of turmoil and transition, ending with a war between Mexico and the United States. With the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848, California became part of the United States territory. Eventually the major ranchos were divided into smaller properties and both land speculation and squatting were widespread. The opening up of the West in general, and the 1849 gold rush specifically, saw the beginning of a great flow of people to California from all over the United States and the world. It was this flow of people that made it possible for California to attain statehood in 1850. Since then, this influx of people has persisted, making California the most populous state in the Union. Because of the gold rush, the population grew and the demographics changed. By 1860, San Francisco had more than 50,000 people, and the population more than doubled in the following decade. From 1870 until the turn of the century, the rate of population growth became slower with each decade. Between 1900 and 1960 there was no consistent pattern. Slow growth occurred in the 1930’s, followed by fast growth between 1940 and 1960. The influx of people during World War II and the postwar baby boom produced the highest rate of population growth since the 1870’s. In the mid and late 1800’s, most of the growth occurred within the city of San Francisco. People crowded into the San Francisco metropolitan area in the 1880’s, and the population grew to 274,000. The outlying areas remained mainly agricultural. The flight to, and growth in, the suburbs mainly came in the 1940’s and 1950’s, when the agricultural land and surrounding hills began to gain in population. The people in the San Francisco Bay area of the 1960’s numbered about 3.5 million, and they were spread out over a land area more than twice the size of Rhode Island (fig. 9.1). Since the first major mode of transportation in the Bay area was by water, it was around the ports or embarcaderos that cities first developed. Steamboat travel led to the growth of East Bay towns such as Oakland, Berkeley, Encinal, and Alameda. Local railroads reached the area in 1864, but it was not until 1869 that the transcontinental railroad began bringing tens of thousands of people to the Bay area. Railroads brought in more people and created new towns South of San Francisco, such as Burlingame, San Mateo, San Carlos, Belmont, and Atherton. In 1863, there was also an active local ferry system between Oakland and San Francisco, as well as trolley car systems in both of these cities. These were to fade and mostly disappear as major modes of transportation after the advent of the automobile. The increasing popularity of the automobile at the end of World War I provided a major impact on California and the Bay area. Ownership of cars in California was far ahead of other states, and because of this the urban population spread rapidly between 1910 through 1940. In the 1920’s and 1930’s, California’s population was only slightly outnumbered by New York’s. Between 1920 and 1939 the population in California more than doubled. During World War II, the population in the Bay area grew through an influx of people from other parts of the United States, such as those who came to work in the Bay area shipyards. 181 Geology and Natural History of the San Francisco Bay Area: A 2001 NAGT Field-Trip Guidebook Areas which had largely remained agricultural, such as the Santa Clara Valley, became highly urbanized after the World War II, largely owing to the automobile (tables 9.1, 9.2). From the 1950’s until the present, the Santa Clara Valley has continued to show remarkable growth because of major industries, such as missile development and the electronics and computer industries, earning it the name “Silicon Valley” and making San Jose now the largest city in the Bay area (table 9.3). The Livermore Valley at this time also changed from a purely agricultural region, growing cattle and wine, to an industrial area with the growth of what was to become the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratory. The population of the Bay area is not only growing but is becoming more and more diverse, (table 9.4), although individual communities vary dramatically. A Gallup study done in 1996-97 showed that 9.9 percent of adults in the area were African-American, 15.5 percent were Asian or Pacific Islander, 15.6 percent were Latino, 74.8 percent were white, and 0.8 percent were other ethnicities. Marin County, however is more than 95 percent white, while San Francisco is 25 percent Asian. Throughout California, groups that were once the minority are now becoming the “emerging majority.” The largest growth in the State in the 1990’s has involved the Asian population, many of whom have immigrated to California to find work in the technology industry. Asians, including those that are part Asian, have shown an increase of 61 percent from 1990 to the 2000 census. California gained 731,000 Asians or Pacific Islanders through immigration and 528,000 through births during the 1990’s. Asians are now a majority in some cities, including the Bay area cities of Milpitas and Daly City. Despite attempts to develop public transportation systems such as bus lines, Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), Caltrain, and light rail, ever-increasing numbers of automobiles continue to clog major traffic arteries throughout the Bay area. The increase in traffic, and continued population growth present additional housing and transportation problems for the future. However, some forward-looking California and Bay area leaders have set aside tens of thousands of acres of open-space land for watersheds and recreation in the Peninsula, East Bay, and Marin County. These areas, which include the Golden Gate Headlands, Angel Island, East Bay Regional Parks, Point Reyes, Mount Tamalpais, and Mount Diablo, provide some refuge for the ever-expanding Bay area population, which now numbers close to seven million. References Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG), 2001, 1997 Demographic charts from the internet: ABAG website, http:// www.abag.ca.gov. Bean, Walton, 1973. California an interpretive history: New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Second Edition, 576 p. Calhoun, Merilyn, 1978. Early days in the Livermore-Amador Valley: Hayward, California: Alameda County School Department. 62 p. Davis, Kingsley, and Langlois, Eleanor, 1963, Future demographic growth of the San Francisco Bay Area: Berkeley, California, Institute of Governmental Studies, University of California, Berkeley, 27 p. Kroeber, A.L., 1925, Handbook of the Indians of California: Washington D.C., Government Printing Office, p.462-473 (reprinted by The Livermore Heritage Guild with permission by the Smithsonian Institution in 1978). Heizer, R.F., and Whipple, M.A., 1971, The California Indians: a source book: Berkeley, University of California Press, 487 p. Pittman, Ruth, 1995, Roadside history of California: Missoula, Montana, Mountain Press Publishing Company, 415 p. Press Democrat, Inc. 2001, Asian population continues to grow, changing California communities (accessed April 3, 2001): http:// www.pressdemo.com/census/state/03cenweb.html. San Francisco Examiner, 1997, Bay Life ’97—Who we are, where we work, how we live: San Francisco Examiner, February 9, 1997, p.W-17. U.S.
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